σιγαλόεις
Ancient Greek
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from a theoretical Luwian 𒊺𒄭𒇷 (še-ḫe-li /šeḫeli-/, “clean”) or Hittite 𒊺𒄭𒇷 (še-ḫe-li /šeḫeli-/, “clean”) forms not yet attested in the available corpus resources, itself from the attested Hurrian 𒅆𒄩𒀀𒆷 (ši-ḫa-a-la /šeḫala-, šiḫala-, šiḫāla/, “clean”), from Sumerian 𒂖 (sikil, “pure”), borrowed also into Akkadian 𒋗𒈛𒄩 (šu.luḫ.ḫa /šuluḫḫu/, “purification rite”). Possibly also distantly related to Ugaritic 𐎒𐎃𐎍 (sḫl, “gemstone grinder, polisher, engraver”), and possibly Arabic سَحَلَ (saḥala, “to trim smooth, to scrap or rub off, to file or pare”), although this has cognate with Akkadian 𒊓𒄩𒈝 (sa-ḫa-lum /saḫālu/, “to pierce or stab; hence to engrave or chisel into”), possibly an early instance of phono-semantic matching with the proto-Semitic sense, to cut smooth and the Sumerian being clean; to make a stone shining.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (5th BCE Attic) IPA(key): /siː.ɡa.ló.eːs/
- (1st CE Egyptian) IPA(key): /si.ɡaˈlo.is/
- (4th CE Koine) IPA(key): /si.ɣaˈlo.is/
- (10th CE Byzantine) IPA(key): /si.ɣaˈlo.is/
- (15th CE Constantinopolitan) IPA(key): /si.ɣaˈlo.is/
Adjective
[edit]σῑγᾰλόεις • (sīgalóeis) m (feminine σῑγᾰλόεσσα, neuter σῑγᾰλόεν); first/third declension
Declension
[edit]Number | Singular | Dual | Plural | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Case/Gender | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | |||||
Nominative | σῑγᾰλόεις sīgalóeis |
σῑγᾰλόεσσᾰ sīgalóessa |
σῑγᾰλόεν sīgalóen |
σῑγᾰλόεντε sīgalóente |
σῑγᾰλοέσσᾱ sīgaloéssā |
σῑγᾰλόεντε sīgalóente |
σῑγᾰλόεντες sīgalóentes |
σῑγᾰλόεσσαι sīgalóessai |
σῑγᾰλόεντᾰ sīgalóenta | |||||
Genitive | σῑγᾰλόεντος sīgalóentos |
σῑγᾰλοέσσης sīgaloéssēs |
σῑγᾰλόεντος sīgalóentos |
σῑγᾰλοέντοιῐν sīgaloéntoiin |
σῑγᾰλοέσσαιν / σῑγᾰλοέσσαιῐν / σῑγᾰλοέσσῃῐν sīgaloéssai(i)n / sīgaloéssēiin |
σῑγᾰλοέντοιῐν sīgaloéntoiin |
σῑγᾰλοέντων sīgaloéntōn |
σῑγᾰλοεσσᾱ́ων / σῑγᾰλοεσσέ͜ων / σῑγᾰλοεσσῶν sīgaloessā́ōn / sīgaloessé͜ōn / sīgaloessôn |
σῑγᾰλοέντων sīgaloéntōn | |||||
Dative | σῑγᾰλόεντῐ sīgalóenti |
σῑγᾰλοέσσῃ sīgaloéssēi |
σῑγᾰλόεντῐ sīgalóenti |
σῑγᾰλοέντοιῐν sīgaloéntoiin |
σῑγᾰλοέσσαιν / σῑγᾰλοέσσαιῐν / σῑγᾰλοέσσῃῐν sīgaloéssai(i)n / sīgaloéssēiin |
σῑγᾰλοέντοιῐν sīgaloéntoiin |
σῑγᾰλόεισῐ / σῑγᾰλόεισῐν / σῑγᾰλοέντεσσῐ / σῑγᾰλοέντεσσῐν / σῑγᾰλοέντεσῐ / σῑγᾰλοέντεσῐν sīgalóeisi(n) / sīgaloéntessi(n) / sīgaloéntesi(n) |
σῑγᾰλοέσσῃσῐ / σῑγᾰλοέσσῃσῐν / σῑγᾰλοέσσῃς / σῑγᾰλοέσσαις sīgaloéssēisi(n) / sīgaloéssēis / sīgaloéssais |
σῑγᾰλόεισῐ / σῑγᾰλόεισῐν / σῑγᾰλοέντεσσῐ / σῑγᾰλοέντεσσῐν / σῑγᾰλοέντεσῐ / σῑγᾰλοέντεσῐν sīgalóeisi(n) / sīgaloéntessi(n) / sīgaloéntesi(n) | |||||
Accusative | σῑγᾰλόεντᾰ sīgalóenta |
σῑγᾰλόεσσᾰν sīgalóessan |
σῑγᾰλόεν sīgalóen |
σῑγᾰλόεντε sīgalóente |
σῑγᾰλοέσσᾱ sīgaloéssā |
σῑγᾰλόεντε sīgalóente |
σῑγᾰλόεντᾰς sīgalóentas |
σῑγᾰλοέσσᾱς sīgaloéssās |
σῑγᾰλόεντᾰ sīgalóenta | |||||
Vocative | σῑγᾰλόεν sīgalóen |
σῑγᾰλόεσσᾰ sīgalóessa |
σῑγᾰλόεν sīgalóen |
σῑγᾰλόεντε sīgalóente |
σῑγᾰλοέσσᾱ sīgaloéssā |
σῑγᾰλόεντε sīgalóente |
σῑγᾰλόεντες sīgalóentes |
σῑγᾰλόεσσαι sīgalóessai |
σῑγᾰλόεντᾰ sīgalóenta | |||||
Derived forms | Adverb | Comparative | Superlative | |||||||||||
σῑγᾰλοέντως sīgaloéntōs |
σῑγᾰλοέστερος sīgaloésteros |
σῑγᾰλοέστᾰτος sīgaloéstatos | ||||||||||||
Notes: |
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Derived terms
[edit]- σῑγᾰλόω (sīgalóō)
Further reading
[edit]- “σιγαλόεις”, in Autenrieth, Georg (1891) A Homeric Dictionary for Schools and Colleges, New York: Harper and Brothers
- σιγαλόεις in Cunliffe, Richard J. (1924) A Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect: Expanded Edition, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, published 1963
- “σιγαλόεις”, in Liddell & Scott (1940) A Greek–English Lexicon, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- Szemerényi, Oswald (1974) “The origins of the Greek lexicon: Ex Oriente Lux”, in The Journal of Hellenic Studies[1], volume 94, , page 153
- Ancient Greek terms borrowed from Luwian
- Ancient Greek terms derived from Luwian
- Ancient Greek terms borrowed from Hittite
- Ancient Greek terms derived from Hittite
- Ancient Greek terms derived from Hurrian
- Ancient Greek terms derived from Sumerian
- Ancient Greek 4-syllable words
- Ancient Greek terms with IPA pronunciation
- Ancient Greek lemmas
- Ancient Greek adjectives
- Ancient Greek paroxytone terms
- Epic Greek